2 research outputs found
Nuclear genes control changes in the organization of the mitochondrial genome in tissue cultures derived from immature embryos of wheat
cDNA cloning and characterization of the nuclear gene encoding chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from the marine red alga Gracilaria verrucosa
Using a PCR-generated homologous probe, we have recovered a cDNA (GapA cDNA) encoding the complete 338 amino-acid chloroplast GAPDH of the marine red alga Gracilaria verrucosa, together with its 78 amino-acid transit peptide. This cDNA was readily aligned with chloroplast-localized GAPDH genes (GapA and GapB) of green plants. The proline residue which contributes to the specificity of NAD+ binding to cytosolic GAPDHs is absent from the deduced polypeptide chain of G. verrucosa GapA as is also the case in the chloroplast GAPDHs of plants. The transit peptide shows a high proportion of random coil, an amino-terminal Met-Ala dipeptide, a high content of hydroxylamino acids, and a net positive charge. The polyadenylation signal appears to be AGTAAA. Genomic Southern-hybridization data indicate that only one chloroplast-GAPDH gene may occur in G. verrucosa. Bootstrapped parsimony trees indicate that the G. verrucosa GapA gene is a sister group to plant chloroplast-GAPDH genes, and are most readily interpreted as showing that red algal and plant chloroplast-localized GAPDHs arose in a single endosymbiotic event
